75 research outputs found
Higgsed Gauge-flation
We study a variant of Gauge-flation where the gauge symmetry is spontaneously
broken by a Higgs sector. We work in the Stueckelberg limit and demonstrate
that the dynamics remain (catastrophically) unstable for cases where the gauge
field masses satisfy , where , is the
gauge coupling, is the gauge field vacuum expectation value, and is
the Hubble rate. We compute the spectrum of density fluctuations and
gravitational waves, and show that the model can produce observationally viable
spectra. The background gauge field texture violates parity, resulting in a
chiral gravitational wave spectrum. This arises due to an exponential
enhancement of one polarization of the spin-2 fluctuation of the gauge field.
Higgsed Gauge-flation can produce observable gravitational waves at
inflationary energy scales well below the GUT scale.Comment: 52 pages, 14 figure
Tensor Spectra Templates for Axion-Gauge Fields Dynamics during Inflation
gauge fields can generate large gravitational waves during inflation,
if they are coupled to an axion which can be either the inflaton or a spectator
field. The shape of the produced tensor power spectrum depends
on the form of the axion potential. We derive analytic expressions and provide
general templates for for various types of the spectator axion
potential. Furthermore, we explore the detectability of the oscillatory
feature, which is present in in the case of an axion monodromy
model, by possible future CMB B-mode polarization observations.Comment: 31 pages, 11 figure
Multifield Inflation after Planck: Isocurvature Modes from Nonminimal Couplings
Recent measurements by the {\it Planck} experiment of the power spectrum of
temperature anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB)
reveal a deficit of power in low multipoles compared to the predictions from
best-fit CDM cosmology. The low- anomaly may be explained by the
presence of primordial isocurvature perturbations in addition to the usual
adiabatic spectrum, and hence may provide the first robust evidence that
early-universe inflation involved more than one scalar field. In this paper we
explore the production of isocurvature perturbations in nonminimally coupled
two-field inflation. We find that this class of models readily produces enough
power in the isocurvature modes to account for the \emph{Planck} low-
anomaly, while also providing excellent agreement with the other {\it Planck}
results.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures. Minor edits to match published versio
The Higgs Boson can delay Reheating after Inflation
The Standard Model Higgs boson, which has previously been shown to develop an
effective vacuum expectation value during inflation, can give rise to large
particle masses during inflation and reheating, leading to temporary blocking
of the reheating process and a lower reheat temperature after inflation. We
study the effects on the multiple stages of reheating: resonant particle
production (preheating) as well as perturbative decays from coherent
oscillations of the inflaton field. Specifically, we study both the cases of
the inflaton coupling to Standard Model fermions through Yukawa interactions as
well as to Abelian gauge fields through a Chern-Simons term. We find that, in
the case of perturbative inflaton decay to SM fermions, reheating can be
delayed due to Higgs blocking and the reheat temperature can decrease by up to
an order of magnitude. In the case of gauge-reheating, Higgs-generated masses
of the gauge fields can suppress preheating even for large inflaton-gauge
couplings. In extreme cases, preheating can be shut down completely and must be
substituted by perturbative decay as the dominant reheating channel. Finally,
we discuss the distribution of reheat temperatures in different Hubble patches,
arising from the stochastic nature of the Higgs VEV during inflation and its
implications for the generation of both adiabatic and isocurvature
fluctuations.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures. Matches the version published on JCA
- β¦